Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
What things cost : an anthology for the people
2023
Please select and request a specific volume by clicking one of the icons in the 'Availability' section below.
Availability
Map It
Annotations

"By 1968, most Americans felt that the War on Poverty had been lost, cast out to the shadows of the Vietnam War. That same year, the Poor People's Campaign marched on Washington in the wake of Martin Luther King's assassination, motivated by King's desire for economic justice. The campaign was a multiracial effort that aimed to alleviate poverty for African Americans, white Americans, Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and Indigenous people. In 2017, the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for a Moral Revival was launched with the goal to bring King's "revolution of values" to fruition. In What Things Cost, Ashley M. Jones and Rebecca Gayle Howell present an anthology of contemporary poems that speak to the current state of the labor movement. Designed to be a fundraiser for The Poor People's Campaign, What Things Cost employs the power of verse and storytelling to illuminate the painful difficulties of building a healthy life in modern America. Like the campaign itself, the poems bridge lived experiences of struggle across racial and historical divides. The effect is a folkloric journey through America's contemporary landscape. The common theme of work threads through this rich literary quilt, revising outdated American Dream mythology. Jones and Howell blanket tales of hardship, gratitude, guilt, grievance, and solidarity within this volume, with the goal of creating an economically just country"-- - (Baker & Taylor)

What Things Cost: an anthology for the people is the first major anthology of labor writing in nearly a century. Here, editors Rebecca Gayle Howell & Ashley M. Jones bring together more than one hundred contemporary writers singing out from the corners of the 99 Percent, each telling their own truth of today's economy.

In his final days, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called for a "multiracial coalition of the working poor." King hoped this coalition would become the next civil rights movement but he was assassinated before he could see it emerge as the Poor People's Campaign, now led by Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis. King's last lesson—about the dangers of dividing working people—inspired the conversation gathered here by Jones and Howell.

Fifty-five years after the assassination of King, What Things Cost collects stories that are honest, provocative, and galvanizing, sharing the hidden costs of labor and laboring in the United States of America. Voices such as Sonia Sanchez, Faisal Mohyuddin, Natalie Diaz, Ocean Vuong, Silas House, Sonia Guiñansaca, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Victoria Chang, Crystal Wilkinson, Gerald Stern, and Jericho Brown weave together the living stories of the campaign's broad swath of supporters, creating a literary tapestry that depicts the struggle and solidarity behind the work of building a more just America.

- (University of Kentucky)

Author Biography

Rebecca Gayle Howell is the author of American Purgatory and Render /An Apocalypse, and the translator of Amal al-Jubouri's Hagar Before the Occupation/Hagar After the Occupation. Her Best Book of the Year honors include those from The Nautilus Awards, Best Translated Book Awards, The Weatherford Awards, The Banipal Prize, Book Riot, The Rumpus, Foreword Reviews, Library Journal, and Burnaway, and both American Purgatory and Render were named Bestsellers of the Decade by Small Press Distribution. Among Howell's awards is the United States Artists Fellowship, the Pushcart Prize, the Sexton Prize, the Carson McCullers Fellowship, and two winter fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. Howell is an Assistant Professor of Poetry and Translation for the University of Arkansas MFA program and the longtime Poetry Editor for The Oxford American, where she and her colleagues received the National Magazine Award for General Excellence. Her most recent release is A Winter Breviary, written by Howell and composed by Reena Esmail, broadcast in part by the BBC and just published by Oxford University Press. Ashley M. Jones is Poet Laureate of Alabama. She is the author of three poetry collections: Magic City Gospel, dark // thing, and REPARATIONS NOW! (on the longlist for the PEN/Voelcker Award for Poetry). Her poetry has earned several awards, including the Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers Award, the Silver Medal in the Independent Publishers Book Awards, the Lena-Miles Wever Todd Prize for Poetry, a Literature Fellowship from the Alabama State Council on the Arts, the Lucille Clifton Poetry Prize from Backbone Press, and the Lucille Clifton Legacy Award from St. Mary's College of Maryland. She was a finalist for the Ruth Lily Dorothy Sargeant Rosenberg Fellowship in 2020, and she was a guest editor of POETRY magazine in 2021. She teaches Creative Writing at the Alabama School of Fine Arts and in the Low Residency MFA program at Converse University. She co-directs PEN Birmingham, and she is the founding director of the Magic City Poetry Festival.

- (University of Kentucky)

Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews

Table of Contents

Introduction 1(3)
Poetry Is Bourgeois 4(3)
Ruben Quesada
I When Will You Learn My Name?
America Runs on Immigrants
7(1)
Soma Guinansaca
My Father Dreams of a New Country
8(1)
Ruth Awad
Untitled
9(3)
Kevin Goodan
Burden Hill Apothecary & Babalu-Aye Prepare Stinging Nettle Tea
12(2)
L. Lamar Wilson
The Bureau of reclamation
14(2)
Erika Meitner
Write this instead
16(1)
Marwa Helal
Poem Where no one is deported
17(2)
Jose Olivarez
Hummingbirds
19(3)
Yaccaira Salvatierra
All in Conflict with This Act Are Hereby Repealed
22(2)
Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle
Workshop
24(1)
Chris Green
Dispatch Out of a Language I Used to Speak
25(2)
Curtis Bauer
Table Talk
27(3)
Tomas Q. Morin
Armory
30(1)
Seth Pennington
The Holiness of Our Fathers
31(3)
Faisal Mohyuddin
My Father's Love Letters
34(2)
Yusef Komunyakaa
Second Attempt Crossing
36(2)
Javier Zamora
Fair Gabbro in the Orchard
38(1)
Upfromsumdirt
Elegy for the Bloodline
39(4)
Kendra Allen
Women's Work
43(4)
Carter Sickels
The Gift
47(4)
Ocean Vuong
II Just Don't Never Give up on Love
The Taking Apart
51(3)
Emily Jalloul
Mourning Hillary and What Might Have Been
54(3)
Jason Kyle Howard
Dialogue in Diptych with Emma Goldman
57(1)
Alina Stefanescu
Poolside at the Dearborn Inn
58(4)
Cal Freeman
C.R.E.A.M.
62(2)
Danez Smith
What Proof Need You of Love
64(2)
Justin Wymer
Hymn of Our Jesus & the Holy Tow Truck
66(1)
Ashley M. Jones
Just Don't Never Give up on Love
67(3)
Sonia Sanchez
Viscera
70(2)
Allison Adelle Hedge Coke
Propriety
72(3)
Rosa Alcala
III Blood and Bones
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Saltine
75(6)
Nickole Brown
On Mute
81(6)
Tony Sweatt
Robert Gipe
Where I'm From (2018)
87(1)
George Ella Lyon
If Anyone Should Fight to Breathe
88(1)
Emily Skaja
Bringing the Monument Down Birmingham, AL
89(1)
Laura Secord
If I May Be Frank
90(2)
A. H. Jerriod Avant
My Whitenesses
92(2)
Sandra Beasley
Statement of Teaching Philosophy
94(1)
Keith Leonard
Work
95(2)
Kwame Dawes
In Alabama
97(8)
Reginald Dwayne Betts
D.D.I.Y.
105(1)
Tyrone Williams
Ghazal for Grandma's Hands
106(2)
Darius V. Daughtry
Family Musings, Matriliny, and Legacy
108(4)
Cheryl R. Hopson
The making of {#289-128} in five parts
112(1)
Randall Horton
ArsPoetica
113(2)
Nabila Lovelace
I Confess
115(2)
Pauletta Hansel
Questionnaire
117(1)
Wendell Berry
Reparations Redefinition: Bond
118(2)
Marcus Wicker
It Comes Down to This
120(1)
M. L. Smoker
Work History
121(5)
Kelly Norman Ellis
Ode to the Hotel Near the Children's Hospital
126(2)
Kevin Young
My Mother, My Mother
128(5)
Luther Hughes
IV Every One of Us: Owned
After a Hard Time
133(1)
Steve Scafidi
Etymology of Land
134(4)
Julia Bouwsma
O Tobacco
138(2)
Crystal Wilkinson
Poem in Furrows
140(1)
Marci Calabretta Cancio-Bello
Necessary Weight, Necessary Time
141(4)
James
Tina Mozelle Braziel
The Zone
145(3)
Rodrigo Toscano
Unskilled Labor
148(1)
Vicente Yepez
"Estan Haciendo Trabajos Que Ni Siquiera Los Negros Quieren Hacer"
149(2)
Nandi Comer
Yes/And
151(1)
Ciona Rouse
Wetback
152(2)
Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
I Am Bound for de Kingdom
154(3)
Marlanda Dekine
V We Shift / We Wield / We Bury
Truck Stop
157(2)
Iliana Rocha
The Fifth Note
159(2)
Keith S. Wilson
38
161(6)
Layli Long Soldier
Thumbprint
167(2)
Justin Bigos
The Neighborhood Girls Ask Their Manager for a Raise
169(2)
Allison Pitinii Davis
A Whole Foods in Hawai'i
171(1)
Craig Santos Perez
Recyclables
172(2)
Su Hwang
In Line
174(2)
Diane Gilliam
Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100
176(2)
Martin Espada
It Was Already Dangerous
178(2)
Lauren Whitehead
Food Giant
180(2)
Julie Marie Wade
For God So Loved the World He Gave Us Vision
182(1)
Bill King
Model
183(4)
Edgar Kunz
VI This Is My One and Only Life
From Obit
187(1)
Victoria Chang
Most Skin Hit Road
188(3)
Levi Romero
January 1, 2018
191(1)
Phillip B. Williams
At War with Ourselves: The Battle of and for the Black Face Boy
192(7)
Nikky Finney
American Interrogation
199(1)
Bryan Borland
Job Opening For Border Patrol Agents
200(2)
Christopher Soto
Pride Fight
202(2)
Patrick Rosal
Bull Dragged from Arena
204(1)
Ross Gay
Somebody Else Sold the World
205(2)
Adrian Matejka
Behind You
207(1)
Jacob Shores-Arguello
Waitress
208(2)
Dorianne Laux
A Crowded Table
210(4)
Silas House
Que me manden a matar/If They Send Someone to Kill Me
214(7)
Alice Driver
VII Something Necessary to Give
Work Is
221(1)
Len Lawson
Lyft Asks Drivers to Share an Inspiring New Year's Eve Story, Miami 2019
222(2)
Cathleen Chambless
The Man of the Small Hours
224(1)
Christian J. Collier
300
225(1)
Yesenia Montilla
The Night after You Lose Your Job
226(2)
Debora Kuan
Fuck It
228(1)
Ray McManus
Prayer for the Workingman
229(2)
Cooper Lee Bombardier
Riot
231(3)
Katie Condon
All My Mothers
234(2)
Joy Priest
My Mother Told Us Not to Have Children
236(1)
Rebecca Gayle Howell
Mineshaft Dream
237(1)
Alicia Suskin Ostriker
Dream of Death by Factory
238(1)
Ron Houchin
Factory
239(1)
Monica Sok
Lucky
240(1)
Doug Van Gundy
Let There Be Coal
241(2)
Jake Skeets
When Those Who Have the Power Start to Lose It, They Panic
243(2)
Savannah Sipple
The Trouble with Young
245(1)
Melva Sue Priddy
Penitential
246(2)
Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon
Disparate Impacts: The Testimony of Joseph Gaston
248(6)
Philip Metres
What I Mean When I Say Labor
254(2)
Geffrey Davis
Snow, Rain, Heat, Pandemic, Gloom of Night
256(4)
Jane Wong
My Mom Makes Friends with the nurses
260(1)
Janice Lobo Sapigao
The Horns of Horns Valley Moved from Alabama to Arkansas, Gained an "e," and I Returned Three Generations Later for Graduate School in Creative Writing, of All Things
261(6)
Jennifer Horne
In the Shadow of Babel
267(5)
Jessica Jacobs
An Hour with an Etruscan Sarcophagus
272(1)
Jill McDonough
The Way Taken
273(2)
Rose McLarney
Intimate Detail
275(1)
Heid E. Erdrich
Planet Labor
276(2)
Joseph Millar
Shanty
278(1)
Mark Wunderlich
Omphalos
279(1)
Kathy Fagan
From Dear Weirdo
280(3)
Abraham Smith
Idle Men on Porches
283(1)
Richard Hague
Ghazal Written For the Lids In Downtown Brooklyn Where I Chose My Name
284(2)
Kayleb Rae Candrilli
What I Learned About Love and Billionaires in 26 Hours
286(4)
Eugenia Leigh
The Courier
290(1)
Mikey Swanberg
American Income
291(1)
Afaa Michael Weaver
May Frick Be Damned
292(1)
Gerald Stern
Santa Ana of Grocery Carts
293(2)
Aracelis Girmay
Ruhn'Gun
295(2)
Natalie Diaz
This moment / Right now
297(2)
Roberto Carlos Garcia
Burden of Belonging
299(2)
Laura Eve Engel
I Give You Back
301(2)
Joy Harjo
Foreday in the Morning
303(1)
Jericho Brown
We Don't Die
304(1)
Darius Simpson
Notes and Acknowledgments 305(8)
Contributors 313(22)
Index of Author Names 335

Librarian's View
Displaying 1 of 1